Do you remember this time last year? When we proved that anyone could become an Agent, the entire market exploded.
A large number of people started using our tools, seeing what we were doing and thinking "I can do this too," then quickly began tinkering with their own solutions. During that time, Agents felt quite novel, and it seemed like the barrier had been broken.
Now? It's no longer a big deal. Agent development has become standard, everyone is playing with it. The novelty has long faded; now this is just infrastructure. Technological democratization works like this—from surprise to ubiquity, it quickly becomes common knowledge.
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ApeShotFirst
· 7h ago
Haha, really? That wave of FOMO last year was incredible. Now that Agents are everywhere, who still finds them rare?
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TopEscapeArtist
· 7h ago
It's the same old story. Those who bought the dip of Agent last year should have looked at the candlestick charts. The technicals have already formed a head and shoulders top, and the price is revisiting the historical high. Entering now is really just adopting a bagholder mentality.
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CounterIndicator
· 7h ago
Oh yes, yes, yes. That wave last year was really the hot trend. Now agents are everywhere, who still cares?
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GasFeeTherapist
· 8h ago
Honestly, now there are agents everywhere, and the feeling of "I discovered a new continent" is gone.
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The threshold has been lowered, but now that anyone can do it, no one cares anymore.
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It feels like this: once something new is democratized, it becomes cheap, and then everyone moves on to the next hot topic.
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But to be honest, the ones who really make money are never the trend followers.
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Last year's boom was long gone, and now those entering are just the bagholders.
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Standard configuration is just standard configuration; anyway, I didn't make money from it, I just watch others play.
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The democratization of technology sounds great, but in reality, it's just a process of accelerated survival of the fittest.
Do you remember this time last year? When we proved that anyone could become an Agent, the entire market exploded.
A large number of people started using our tools, seeing what we were doing and thinking "I can do this too," then quickly began tinkering with their own solutions. During that time, Agents felt quite novel, and it seemed like the barrier had been broken.
Now? It's no longer a big deal. Agent development has become standard, everyone is playing with it. The novelty has long faded; now this is just infrastructure. Technological democratization works like this—from surprise to ubiquity, it quickly becomes common knowledge.